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Is Dutch Hard to Learn? An Honest Guide for English Speakers

By Miracle Team ·

If you speak English, Dutch is one of the friendliest languages you can pick. It sits right between English and German on the family tree, which means a surprising amount of it already looks familiar. That doesn’t mean it’s effortless — a couple of sounds and one stubborn grammar quirk take real practice — but the honest answer to “is Dutch hard to learn?” is: less than you fear, especially as an English speaker.

Dutch and English are Germanic cousins, so you start with thousands of words already half-learned. Look how transparent these are: water (water), hand (hand), boek (book), huis (house), appel (apple), drinken (to drink), warm (warm). Word order is broadly similar in simple sentences, and — unlike German — Dutch dropped its complicated case endings centuries ago. For everyday reading, you’ll guess the meaning of whole sentences from day one.

What actually takes practice

Three things, none of them a wall:

  • The “hard G” — a throaty sound English doesn’t have.
  • De vs het — Dutch nouns take one of two definite articles, with no obvious logic.
  • Word order in longer sentences — the verb likes to jump to the end of subordinate clauses.

Notice what’s not on the list: no cases to memorize, no tones, a familiar alphabet, and spelling that’s far more regular than English.

The G sound — Dutch’s signature challenge

The famous Dutch g (and ch) is a raspy sound made at the back of the throat — think of clearing your throat gently. It shows up constantly: goedemorgen (good morning), gracht (canal), acht (eight). In the north it’s harsh; in the south and in Flanders it’s softer. It feels strange for a week, then it clicks. Practise out loud with native audio rather than reading silently — pronunciation lives in the muscles.

De or het — the part that lingers

Every Dutch noun is either a “de word” or a “het word,” and even advanced learners occasionally pause. The reassuring news: roughly two-thirds of nouns take de, and a few reliable rules cover much of the rest (all plurals are de; every -je diminutive is het). The winning strategy is to learn each noun with its article from the very first day. We break it all down in de or het: how to master Dutch articles.

How long does it take?

Language institutes class Dutch among the fastest languages for English speakers to reach working proficiency — in the same easy tier as Spanish or French. With consistent daily practice, you can hold simple conversations in a few months. The variable isn’t difficulty; it’s consistency. When you’re ready to begin, follow the full plan in how to learn Dutch for beginners.

How to start the smart way

  1. Begin with high-frequency words. A few hundred words cover most daily situations. Grab the list in 100 common Dutch words for beginners.
  2. Learn words with a picture and audio, not with an English translation — it builds faster recall. Here’s the method: learning vocabulary with pictures.
  3. Say everything out loud to train the g and the vowels from the start.
  4. Keep it daily and short. Fifteen focused minutes beats a weekend marathon.

A simple first-month plan

  • Week 1: greetings, courtesy, numbers — out loud, with audio.
  • Week 2: food, travel and the most common verbs (zijn, hebben, gaan, willen), each noun with its de or het.
  • Week 3: the g, sch and the diphthongs ui/ij/eu; start reading sentences aloud.
  • Week 4: build your own short sentences and review everything with spaced repetition.

The easiest way to build the habit

The fastest way to combine frequency-based vocabulary, native audio, de/het training and daily review is an app built for it. Dutch For Kids And Beginners — great for adult beginners too — teaches hundreds of words with pictures and native pronunciation, and its built-in de/het trainer drills exactly the words you keep getting wrong.

Download Dutch For Kids And Beginners free on Google Play and find out for yourself how approachable Dutch really is.